Is language a barrier for quality care in hospitals? A case series from an Emergency Department of a teaching hospital in Brisbane


Autoria(s): Mahmoud, Ibrahim; Hou, Xiang-Yu; Chu, Kevin; Clark, Michele
Data(s)

2011

Resumo

Aim: The aim of this pilot study is to describe the use of an Emergency Department (ED) at a large metropolitan teaching hospital by patients who speak English or other languages at home. Methods: All data were retrieved from the Emergency Department Information System (EDIS) of this tertiary teaching hospital in Brisbane. Patients were divided into two groups based on the language spoken at home: patients who speak English only at home (SEO) and patients who do not speak English only or speak other language at home (NSEO). Modes of arrival, length of ED stay and the proportion of hospital admission were compared among the two groups of patients by using SPSS V18 software. Results: A total of 69,494 patients visited this hospital ED in 2009 with 67,727 (97.5%) being in the SEO group and 1,281 (1.80%) in the NSEO group. The proportion of ambulance utilisation in arrival mode was significantly higher among SEO 23,172 (34.2%) than NSEO 397 (31.0%), p <0.05. The NSEO patients had longer length of stay in the ED (M = 337.21, SD = 285.9) compared to SEO patients (M= 290.9, SD = 266.8), with 46.3 minutes (95%CI 62.1, 30.5, p <0.001) difference. The admission to the hospital among NSEO was 402 (31.9%) higher than SEO 17,652 (26.6%), p <0.001. Conclusion: The lower utilisation rates of ambulance services, longer length of ED stay and higher hospital admission rates in NSEO patients compared to SEO patients are consistent with other international studies and may be due to the language barriers.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/52159/

Publicador

Australasian Epidemiological Association

Relação

Mahmoud, Ibrahim, Hou, Xiang-Yu, Chu, Kevin, & Clark, Michele (2011) Is language a barrier for quality care in hospitals? A case series from an Emergency Department of a teaching hospital in Brisbane. Australasian Epidemiologist, 18(1), pp. 6-9.

Fonte

Centre for Health Research; Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation

Palavras-Chave #110305 Emergency Medicine #111709 Health Care Administration
Tipo

Journal Article